Samrin Blocks Letter About Vietnamese Army ELCs
Cambodia Daily | 3 February 2016
National Assembly President Heng Samrin has refused to forward to
Prime Minister Hun Sen a letter from an opposition lawmaker asking that a
group of rubber plantations owned by Vietnamese Army commanders be
canceled because they violate the Constitution.
The January 25 letter from CNRP lawmaker Um Sam An follows a
Cambodia Daily report in December revealing that the Vietnamese
military had gradually assumed ownership of four rubber plantations
inside Ratanakkiri province along Cambodia’s border with Vietnam
totaling nearly 40,000 hectares.
On Tuesday, Assembly spokesman and administration chief Leng Peng
Long confirmed receipt of the letter and said it would not be making it
into the prime minister’s hands.
“Samdech [Mr. Samrin] did not send this letter to Samdech Prime
Minister because he believes that this letter is the propaganda of an
individual and is without merit,” he said.
In his letter, posted to his Facebook page, Mr. Sam An claims the
economic land concessions (ELCs) violate the Constitution because they
amount to Vietnamese Army bases—despite there being no evidence of
military activity on the land [HUH???].
“Please, Samdech, check and confiscate the economic land concessions
from the Vietnamese military soldiers who occupy them and who have
established military bases on the ELCs in Ratanakkiri province,” the
letter says.
Also on his Facebook page, Mr. Sam An accuses Mr. Samrin of violating
both the Constitution and the Assembly’s internal rules by refusing to
forward the letter to Mr. Hun Sen.
Mr. Peng Long said the Assembly president had the authority to decide
what letters reach Mr. Hun Sen, who, he argued, had already provided a
thorough public accounting of Cambodia’s long-standing border disputes
with Vietnam.
“Samdech President [Mr. Samrin] did not violate the Constitution as
accused because Samdech has discretion when sending documents to the
government,” he said. “And Samdech Prime Minister has already explained
this, so if he sends the letter it would be useless.”
Mr. Peng Long added that the ELCs in question must be legal because
the prime minister approved them. “The actions of the government in
providing the economic land concessions are not wrong because Samdech
Prime Minister does everything based on the law,” he said.
Mr. Sam An, who is in self-imposed exile, could not be reached for
comment Tuesday. The opposition lawmaker has been among the most
outspoken critics of the government’s ongoing demarcation of the
Cambodia-Vietnam border and has decided to remain abroad for fear of
arrest following public accusations of incitement.
Mr. Sam An’s colleague, CNRP lawmaker Ou Chanrith, on Tuesday
rejected Mr. Peng Long’s interpretation of the rules defining the
Assembly president’s powers.
“It’s not correct,” he said. “All letters, no matter what, should be
sent to the government, on any issue…and let the government respond.”
The opposition has accused Mr. Samrin of unjustly blocking its letters to government officials several times before.
As for the ELCs in Ratanakkiri, Mr. Chanrith said it was not the
CNRP’s official position that the four plantations constituted foreign
military bases in breach of the Constitution and that the sites needed
to be investigated further.
Well, what else is new with the CPP's Viet controlled regime in Cambodia!
ReplyDeleteCan the NatAss CPP majority denounce the Viet? The entire world would seriously doubt it!!!